MD -- Silver Spring -- After yet another snowfall -- Notes:
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Description of Pictures: Another snowfall... I measured the snow on my porch and it was just over feet deep. I only walked a few blocks, passing some broken branches and sagging or collapsed awnings but no major damage. During my walk, I found the folks on the next street over had been without power for eight hours.
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Copyrights: Standard stuff. All pictures were taken by Bruce Guthrie who retains copyright on them. Free for non-commercial use. If used in a publication or web site, please give appropriate attribution (such as "Photos (c) Bruce Guthrie"). If they're used in a publication, I'd love to receive a free copy of the publication. You are not authorized to resell these pictures or make a profit from them. Descriptive text, if any, is from a mixture of sources, quite frequently from official signs on location; copyrights, if any, are retained by their original owners.
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
SSSNOW_100206_171.JPG: The snow plow is owned by a contractor who plowed our street a few times. When done, he plowed to his house and stopped.
SSSNOW_100206_179.JPG: The awning had collapsed from the various snows.
SSSNOW_100206_232.JPG: This was atop a car antenna. Note the card was totally buried in snow.
SSSNOW_100206_252.JPG: Note the awning sagging on the right.
SSSNOW_100206_330.JPG: These guys were walking the neighborhood.
SSSNOW_100206_364.JPG: That's a car buried under there.
SSSNOW_100206_380.JPG: This was Dale Drive. It was in considerably better shape than my road but now one was daring to drive anywhere.
SSSNOW_100206_393.JPG: I liked the mohawk on the car.
SSSNOW_100206_400.JPG: This was Mansfield. They partially plowed it later in the day but encountered a downed line and ended up not plowing it for several days. They lost power that morning and we were without power for over 50 hours.
SSSNOW_100206_407.JPG: Notice the cardinal.
SSSNOW_100206_531.JPG: You can see the clouds clearing. The next day was beautiful!
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[Display ALL photos]
2009_MD_SS_Snow: MD -- Silver Spring -- After a snowfall (84 photos from 2009)
2010_02_06_SS_Snow: MD -- Silver Spring -- After yet another snowfall (81 photos from 02/06/2010)
2010_02_07_SS_Snow: MD -- Silver Spring -- On a bright shiny day after a snowfall (119 photos from 02/07/2010)
2010_02_10_SS_Snow: MD -- Silver Spring -- During another snow storm (15 photos from 02/10/2010)
2010_02_11A_SS_Snow: MD -- Silver Spring -- On the day after our final (?) snowfall (89 photos from 02/11/2010)
2010_02_12A_SS_Snow: MD -- Silver Spring -- After our final (?) snowfall (12 photos from 02/12/2010)
2010_02_16A_SS_Snow: MD -- Silver Spring -- Still recovering from the snow (11 photos from 02/16/2010)
Generally-Related Subject Description: From http://www.fact-index.com/s/si/silver_spring__maryland.html:
In 1840, Francis Preston Blair, with his daughter, Elizabeth, and his horse Selim discovered the spring, flowing with chips of mica. Two years later, the 20-room mansion Silver Spring was built on a 250-acre country homestead situated just outside of Washington, D.C. By 1854, Blair's son, Montgomery Blair, who became Postmaster General under Abraham Lincoln, and represented Dred Scott before the United States Supreme Court built a house in the area, called Falkland. Samuel Phillips Lee married Elizabeth Blair, and they bore Francis Preston Blair Lee in 1857. The child would eventually become the first popularly elected Senator in United States history. In 1864, Confederate States of America Army General Jubal Early occupied Silver Spring prior to the Battle of Fort Stevens. After the engagement, fleeing Confederate soldiers razed Montgomery Blair's Falkland residence.
In the late 1800s, the area started developing. 1873 brought rails to the area, as the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad's Metropolitan Branch ran from Washington, DC to Point of Rocks, Maryland. The first suburban development began in 1887 when Selina Wilson divided part of her farm on Colesville Road and Brookville Road into 5 and 10 acre plots.
In 1893, Francis Preston Blair Lee and his wife, Anne Brooke Lee, gave birth to E. Brooke Lee, who is known as the father of modern Silver Spring for his visionary attitude about developing the region. ... E. Brooke Lee and his brother, Blair Lee, founded the Lee Development Company, whose Colesville Road office building remains a downtown fixture. Suburban development continued in 1922 when Woodside Development Corporation created Woodside Park, with acre plot home sites. Montgomery Blair High School opened in 1924; it was the first high school in Montgomery County. 1924 also was the year that trolley service on Georgia Avenue across B&O's Metropolitan Branch was temporarily suspended so ...More...
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